Remittances — the quiet anchor of India’s external finances
Relevance: General Studies Paper III — Indian Economy (external sector, balance of payments)
- What happened
The Indian rupee has weakened by nearly 12% against the United States dollar since May 2025. Most analysts blame this on Foreign Direct Investment (long-term investment in companies and factories) and Foreign Portfolio Investment (investment in shares and bonds) both turning negative — money flowing out rather than in.
But this narrative overlooks the real stabiliser of India’s external accounts: remittances, the money that Indians working abroad send back home.
| Important Terms and Schemes
→ Remittances = Current Account (Net Secondary Income). Never the Financial Account — that is where foreign investment sits. → Liberalised Remittance Scheme is for money going OUT (US $250,000 a year per resident). Inward remittances are not covered by it — a favourite reversal trap. → Why economists prize remittances: they are non-debt-creating and stable — no future repayment, no sudden flight. Foreign portfolio investment is the opposite on both counts. |
- Why remittances matter so much
- $138 billion received in 2024 — India is the world’s largest recipient of remittances, by a wide margin.
- They average about 3% of national income (Gross Domestic Product) — consistently larger than the net inflow from foreign direct and portfolio investment combined.
- Since mid-2013, remittances have, on average, financed more than the whole of India’s goods trade deficit (the gap between what India imports and exports).
- They are stable — driven by the steady earnings and family obligations of the diaspora — unlike portfolio investment, the volatile “hot money” that can flee suddenly during a crisis.
- They create no future repayment burden. Foreign investment generates outflows later (dividends, profits, interest); remittances are one-way gifts home, with no strings attached.
- Where remittances sit in the Balance of Payments
The Balance of Payments is the full record of a country’s money dealings with the rest of the world. Its Current Account has three parts — and remittances sit inside the third.
INDIA’S CURRENT ACCOUNT — THE THREE BUILDING BLOCKS
| Current Account = Trade Balance + Net Primary Income + Net Secondary Income |
| TRADE BALANCE — LARGE DEFICIT (A DRAIN)
India imports far more goods than it exports — a persistent, structural shortfall. |
| NET PRIMARY INCOME — MILD DEFICIT (A DRAIN)
Investment income flowing out (dividends, interest, profits paid to foreigners) exceeds what Indians earn on their assets abroad. |
| NET SECONDARY INCOME — LARGE SURPLUS (THE CUSHION)
This is where remittances live. Diaspora inflows of about $138 billion in 2024 — the single biggest offset to the trade deficit. |
| THE POINT MOST STUDENTS MISS
Foreign direct and portfolio investment sit in the Financial(Capital) Account — not the Current Account. The slice of the current account deficit that foreign investment finances is only the leftover, after remittances have already done most of the work. |
- The immediate risk — the “waiting game”
- When the rupee is falling, the diaspora tends to delay sending money home, hoping for a better exchange rate later (more rupees per dollar).
- If that pause happens to coincide with a widening trade deficit (for example, costlier oil imports) and with foreign investment already negative, a sudden financing gap can open up — adding fresh pressure on the rupee and on the country’s foreign-exchange reserves.
| UPSC VALUE BOX | |
| Balance of Payments | The systematic record of all economic transactions between residents of a country and the rest of the world over a period. Two broad parts: the Current Account and the Capital and Financial Account. |
| Current Account vs Financial Account | Current Account = trade in goods and services + income + transfers such as remittances. Financial Account = cross-border investment such as foreign direct and portfolio investment. Remittances belong to the Current Account. |
| Net Primary vs Net Secondary Income | Primary income = earnings on investment and labour across borders. Secondary income = one-way transfers with nothing given in return — chiefly remittances and grants. |
| Liberalised Remittance Scheme | A Reserve Bank of India scheme governing money sent out by resident Indians — up to US $250,000 per person per financial year for permitted purposes. It does not deal with money received from abroad. |
| Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 | The overarching law for all cross-border money flows in India. It replaced the stricter Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, 1973. |
| Internationalising digital payments | The Reserve Bank is linking India’s Unified Payments Interface with foreign systems — such as PayNow in Singapore and arrangements in the United Arab Emirates — to cut the cost of sending money home. |
With reference to remittances and India’s Balance of Payments, consider the following statements:
- Inward remittances are recorded in the Current Account, as part of Net Secondary Income.
- The Liberalised Remittance Scheme of the Reserve Bank of India governs inward remittances received by residents from the diaspora.
- India has been the world’s largest recipient of remittances in recent years, with inflows of about US $138 billion in 2024.
How many of the above statements are correct?
(a) Only one
(b) Only two
(c) All three
(d) None
ANSWER: (B) ONLY TWO
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